Inquiry a 'start' in addressing institutional racism

Race Relations Commissioner Dame Susan Devoy believes children were more likely to be taken off their families and put into state homes if they were Māori.

Dame Susan and the Human Rights Commission want the Government to set up an inquiry into the historical abuse of children in state care.

Dame Susan Devoy Photo: RNZ / Rebekah Parsons-King

Dame Susan said uplifting Māori children from their families for trivial reasons or no reason at all would be the very definition of institutional racism. Only an inquiry would determine whether the policy was racist.

People who had been in state care, experts and the homes themselves had said children were more likely to have been taken from Māori or poorer families, she said. If New Zealand was going to address institutional racism in all parts of society an inquiry would be a "really good place to start".

Dame Susan said by the 1970s, almost half the children in state care were Māori, and a generation later more than half the prison population was Māori, many of them former wards of the state.

She did not know "for sure" that there was a connection between being put in state care and the likelihood of going to prison.

"That's why we're asking for an inquiry to find out, because that's what I suspect and this is certainly what academics and criminologists believe as well."

Dame Susan said the historical abuse was a blight on history that affected public faith in state care and was the most serious human rights issue facing the country.

"These people need to have an apology. They need to have it acknowledged what happened to them and they need to be provided with the care and support they need to actually move through their lives.